SECRET Approved For Re*dse 2000/08/07 : CIA-RDP96-OOVeROO040 SG1 I D R A F T 23 JAN-73 SOME REFLECTIONS ON PARAPSYCHOLOGICAL PHENOMENA AND THE INTELLIGENCE COMMUNITY introduction 1. Prompted by the 23 JAN 73 Stanford Research Institute (SRI) presentation o~ experiments with Ingo SWANN and Uri GELLER and by an earlier paper on "Direct Brain Per c eption /Action" which was prepared by Dr Henry PUHARICH and Captain Edgar MITCHELL, this paper : briefly discusses the background concerning the SWANN-GELLER phenomena; analyj~es the three basic questions which are suggested by these purported phenomena; outlines the author's limited knowledge of the Agency's current position and involvernent as regards this field; and makes some basic recom- mendations concerning possible courses of action. SG1 I Background 2. Since stenographic notes were taken during the 23 Jan 73 SRI presentation and since a verbatim record can be obtained from of OSI (ext 4035), this paper will not attempt to render an account of the session. It is sufficient to note that the presentation consisted of descriptions, a film, slides and extensive question-and- answer exchanges on SRI's recent and continuing experiments with Ingo SWANN and Uri GELLER- -covering a broad spectrum of purported parapsychological phenomena and focusing particularly on : ESP ("P" in both the perception and projection sense); telekinetics; clairvoyance; and the perturbation/ stre ssing/distortion of metals and fields of energy by apparently paranormal (par aphys ical /paraps ychologic al) means. As presented by the three SRI researchers and their 20 minute film of GELLER, there would appear to have been an incredibly high order of consistent performance in thesc areas;.-IF one accepts as being above reproach both the credentials and the motivation of the SRI representatives and if one accepts the efficacy of their laboratory controLs and their statistical analysis of the data. 3. From some of the questioning during the session and remarks overhead later , it was clear that a fair proportion of the approximately 20 observers entertained some doubts concerning controls and/or analysis. But the doubts appeared to be inostly, if not entirely, matters of degree and of personal preference in terms of methodology-- and were tempered by understanding of the relatively short lead-time and facilities available to SRI. Most of those present appeared to accept, as a working hypothesis, Approved For Release 2000/08/07 : CIA-RDP96-00787ROO0400070031-9 SE CRET Approved For Rek4se 2000/08/07 :-M-RDP96-00MR000400070031-9 the presence of some undefined paranormal phenomena and none appeared disposed, even privately, to question the honesty of the SRI representatives. My own impressions were that, while GELLER's powers seem to have been attenuated by the laboratory controls (as compared with the claims made ln Dr PUHARICII's paper), substantial indications of some extraordinary power or talent remained. And, for what it may be worth, I felt that the SRI representatives were essentially hoilest in their approach-- although , being human and in need of financial support to pursue their investigations, perhaps somewhat self-serving in the selection and manner of presentation of their data. Three Basic Questions for the IntelliRence Communit 4. The focus of this paper, however, is broader than this one incident. The whole field of paranormal phenomena suggests three pragmatic and fundamental questions to which the intelligence community should address itself: WOULD there be SIGNIFICANT potential for the intelligence community? DOES it exist? WHAT is it? As posed, the questions may seem too obvious or naive but I believe there is some virtue in initially viewing the issue in these simplistic terms and in that order --i. e. , judgement, measurement and theorem. Obviously this break-down is artificial in many respects : for instance, the first question cannot be answered definitively until the last question is answered; and, hopefully, one should construct his approach to the second question (whether') so as to be obtaining, at the same time, evidence appropriate to the third ('what'). But the paranormal field is so delicate, so suspect and so potentially explosive that only the most orderly of plebian approaches seems likely to survive in the bureaucratic atmosphere--no matter what the 'reality' or the 'evidence' may prove to be. So let us examine these questions in more detail. 5. If we establish to our com2lete satisfaction that such paranormal phenomena DO exist, would there be SIGNIFICANT potential for application ~y the intelligence comnaun- ity in the national in.terest? This question is, I believe, more complex than it appears on the surface. While there is little doubt that (particularly if we consider our defensive responsibilities concerning foreign capabilities in this field) we could safely answer 'yes' in the abstract, we ought to be quite pragmatic about it from the outset. No matter how interesting the field might be to us as individuals or how fraught with significance for 2000~q8kq7_Q;af11P51§aq97 societ~Rrq C710, Mir- ~~~l~910c~iPPnoTooroql~r9olvemeiit Approved For ReMse 2000/08/07 : CIA-RDP96-00*W7ROO0400070031-9 would be on the basis of demonstrable utility in : the collection or interpretation of 'intelligence' on foreign powers; the recruitment of sources leading to that end; the conceiving and conducting of physical /psychological/paranormal activi.ties an(] prograrns designed to influence or coiistraiiri attit-ades /actions /capabilities ol foreign powers and/or their leaders to our advantage; or the enhancement of the abilities of our (i. e. loosely 'U.S. ') personnel to accomplish any of the above by heightening their inter - and intra-personal powers--whether in a truly paranormal mode or not. There are several aspects to this overall question. a. The Purported Powers. Holding in abeyance for a moment the question of 'whether' and limiting the discussion to GELLER (since the most impressive evidence, the film, was on him and since his claimed powers are broader than SWANN's), we have apparent instances of : mind-reading (primarily ot perhaps solely numbers and names of cities) with over 90% accuracy and few baulks; mind projection (where he 'forces' the researchers to name a city previously written-down by him) with apparently a high order of accuracy (no statistical data, merely anecdotal); perception of unseen, simple line drawings (apparently 100% accuracy); limited stre s sing /distortion of metals after prolonged physical contact but evidentally far beyond normal physical powers; limited but consistent (though not, apparently, predictable in nature) effect on electric and magnetic energ-Ly fields when in close (almost touching) proximity to them; long- distance telephone perception of simple designs or letters (anecdotal); detecting presenc( or absence of metals or water in scaled containers without touching them (100% awcuracy and two baulks out of 12 attempts); perception of uppermost die-faces in scaled box on 'do-able-blindbasis (1001/o accuracy and two baulks in 12 attempts); percep- tion of a road (while driving blindfolded at high speeds), allegedly through the eyes of his heroic companions (anecdotal); and several other anecdotal episodes of similar natures. While it would stretch no one's imagination to create specific operational scenarios (e. g. , recruitment of a given Soviet) in which these manifestations could be highly useful, that would also be true if we were only dealing with a highly skillful magician. The real question is : IF there is a paranormal force at work here how could we most appropriatelVand effectively employ it to our long-range advantage? Because (again, IF) we would then be posed on the threshhold of modes of perception/ con-imunication/interaction which transcendir our present understanding of physical laws and of man's nature and of a new awareness and discoveries which would dwarf the phen~pyponF,qtlMga.lpiZpNML07c'St'LA-tRppt94zpgT§Zf~099#ppp7qq~lZ~qv,,s to the Approved For Reltl~se 2000/08/07 :_C&-RDP96-0d*~R000400070031-9 question of what significance such phenomena might have for our interests--and this be can best/done only if related to the most realistic futurology projections of the intel- ligence community's (read, effectively, the nation's) needs Irolos /resources /envbron- ments in the next 5-to-15 and 15-to-215 -years. Even if GFJT-_JLER can (3o ~AT)~d, 1j.,;- and even if he were a fully cleared staff officer, we would, I submit, be hard-pressed to use him appropriately at the present time. As noted, the question of utility is more complex than it appears on the surface and deserves early and serious thought. b. TransferabilitV. IF the phenomena exists, its utility for our purposes would be in direct proportion to the degree to which the skills could be learned or the powe::s acquired or developed by appropriate persons --and the ddgree to which we could develol systems for identifying people with the essential attributes. In the hands of a GELLER, certainly, these powers can do us very little good--and possibly quite a bit of harm. IF the phenomena exist, they must be in some sense (though, perhaps, in a sense which eludes our current frame of reference) a function pf man's nature and his environment; that is, the L)otential must exist in some degree in all men. Just as some men are born color-blind, it might be that some are genetically deprived of their 'psi' sense; and it might also be that the latent capacity is so attenuated in the vast majority as to be effectively useless. But the basic assumption must be that what some men can do other can do. The issue would be : how to identify the latent capacity and how to surface/ perfect/control it. For instance, 100% accuracy in ESPing numbers is impressive (evel if we are 'only' witnessing hypersensitive voice-box readings) but can this facility be perfected to 'read' attitudes /intents /emotions ? When I asked this question re GELLE R the SRI response was 'yes' but they admit that they have not begun to investigate this phenomenon. These and other questions relating to identification and transferability have a direct bearing on the utility question. c. Con.trol/Predictabilitx IMotivation. Obviously, the phenomena will be useful for our purposes only if therea certain minimal degree of reliability associated with its functioning at our behest, in our environment and for our purposes. Here we get into the esoteric realm of the 'motivation' of the forces at work and it is diffbcult to conceive of such 'forces' having parochial interests - -though it is relatively easy to believe that their agents (GELLER et al ) might be psychologically inhibited by their own subjective attributions in this respect. Indeed, virtually all known mystics (in- cluding GELLER and SWANN) have claimed to be affected by motivational auras in theiiApprvm&Eor.Ratemec2OGO/jp&WriZAAeRDPafi.iW&ZR-nOQ4000MMik-pwe must Approved For ReMse 2000/08/07 : CIA-RDP96-od*'~R000400070031-9 (assuining we come to accept the existence of the phenomena) crank this factor into the 'utility' equation. 6. DO we have incontrovertible evidence of the existence of LEGITIMATE (i. c. as -PE _2f~s2L(Lparanormal) phenomcna'? There is no doubt that something happens but if we are merely confronted with highly skilled and ingenious practitioners of 'normal, arts there is no broad significance in it for us--although, again, I can easily imagine practical operational uses on a case-by-case basis (and in the event of negative para-- normal conclusions this aspect might well deserve limited exploration with the operat- ional elements). In any case, I don't believe that even the SRI representatives would disagree with the statement that we DO NOT have such evidence at this time. Certainly there are highly suggestive indications, particularly in the ESP field (and some provo- cative possibilities in other fields), but there is no INCONTROVERTIBLE evidence. And, moreover, as matters now stand, we are not going to get such evidence from SRI. Even if appropriate individuals in the bureaucracy go on record as stating that they fully accept SRI's willingness and competence to institute new and iron-clad control and analysis procedures, the bureaucracy as a whole would not (properly, in my estimation) accept positive findings from them as definitive evidence in a matter of this magnitude. I do not question their honesty but, being so closely identified with the experiments (historically, financially and emotionally), their findings would never, in the final analysis, be accepted as unbiasq~_,d- -however unbiassed they might, in fact, be. If we are serious about the effort we might as well sgure ourselves the time and expense of another intermediary step. This doesn't mean that SRI should be cut out of the picture (even if they could be, which is doubtful) but, rather, that we reconsider the nature /mode /degree of our involvement. I see the purposes and options as follows-- and have some reason to believe (though am far from sure) that SRI follow our lead if we doubled our current investment (ca 52K) in the next project year. a. Options. Basically, there are two functional options: we can (on an Agency- or community-wide. basis) meticulously structure the laboratory controls, the specific nature and sequence of investigations and the precise s tati stical -analytical procedures and give thorn to SRI to comply with--with spot -trionitoring by our representative(s); or we can, having done our homework, have the procedures carr ied out under the full-time supervision of our representative(s)- -either in the SRI installation or (with the SRI representatives) in a more convenient installation of our choice. For the obvious reasoARKOVed the Approved For Rett~se 2000/08/07 --GIA-RDP96-00'M~R000400070031-9 second option is so far preferable as to almost invalidate the 'option' concept. As for the choice of subjects, the project should be sufficiently flexible as to exploit any truly useful ones who become available,--but the major programmed emphasis should be on SWANN, lie is not only more readily accessible and available but he is also, evidently, much easier and more predictable to work with and appears to be genuinely interested, himself, in getting at the root of the phenomena; also, of especial signifi- cance for our purposes, his powers seem to have been deliberately cultivated in the recent past and are perhaps more amenable to analysis for that reason. (NOTE: ShoulCL SWANN become the focal point this wuuld also provide a more acceptable rationale for SRI's, ostensibly, renting new facilities on the East coast since he resides in New York--and, although I'm not clear on this, the maintaining of such 'cover' vis a vis SWANN may still be necessary. ) GELLER is neither available (at least not predict- ably so) nor very cooperative --and his motivation seems clearly to be image-building and financial rather than scientific. Nonetheless, to the extent that he might be available, carefully thought-out procedures /controls /investigations should be structurc6l in advance for him. Only a word or so about our representative(s): the need for well- qualified, wholly unbiassed and benignly (though hard-headedly) skeptical people is paramount--and it is likely that several representatives (all equally acceptable to their peers) should be used throughout the year on a random - repetitive basis. b. furposes. Simply stated, they are to measure 'whether' and to theorize as to 'what'--and, obviously, the series of investigations should be designed so that the two are mutually supportive in a coherent continuum having the characteristics of progressive and rational elimination. Since the details of design would be the subjc;ct 10 ,) IV-D // of exhaustive deliberation by the body which paragraphsA (below) recommends be formed, there is no point in trying to anticipate the substance at this time. But it should be made clear that, in addition to controls /investigation/analyses of the phenomena, a major purpose should alaoVa be an exhaustive examination (medical/ psychiatric /behavioral/ cognitive /philosophic /biographic) of the subject himsull. This is another reason why SWANN is more appropriate fior fimus. 7. What are the mechanics or the d f the force or natural law lyina behind 2yaan11c s .21: the phenomena (when and if accepted as valid)? Without belaboring the point, this is obviously the crux of the matter--for only with such understanding will we be able to assess transferability and control and begin to grapple with optimum utility. It might Approved For Release 2000/08/07 : CIA-RDP96-00787ROO0400070031-9 I - 7 - Approved For Re*ase 2000/08/07 : CIA-RDP96-OOW7ROO0400070031-9 be wiser to stop here, short of science-fiction speculation, but readership that has come thus far is presumably broad-minded enough to take the following in the spirit intended. Let me state simply that I, at the present time, neither believe nor dis- believe in the phenomena- -although I must frankly admit that, like many ot"hers, j find myself essentially disposed (philosophically/ emotionally) in favor of the proposition that what we have so far learned about the nature of man and his environment compares poorly (qualitatively, at least) with what we have yet to$" learn. Probabilistically, then, I find it easier to believe that there might be phenomena in this general $61$ area which we do not understand than that there are not. Whether GELLER and SWANN et a! are in control of such phenomena or whether they are even poititing at the right phen- omena, is another question. But if one views the long history of reported parapsychol- ogical pheno$mena (so greatly obscured by the cultists and charlatans who have tried to exploit it for both good and bad reasons) it becomes virtually impossible to deny that at least some people to so me degree have or can develop and employ sensory and/or motor energies which are, effectively, paranormal insofaras the normal, individual cannot or does not employ them. That this natural human propensity, the willingness to believe, is the bedrock of the magician's trade I don't deny for one moment--and I am quite prepared to accept the hypothesis that, in part at least, we are being victimized in this respect by GELLER. From the reported data I am inclined to think that this is less likely to be the case with SWANN. In any case I do believe that, if these or other phenomena withstand the rigors of competent scientific investigation, man is bound eventually to perceive that the reality lying behind them is wholly rational. This is not to say that they might not have great mystical or religious significance for mankind but, if so, it will come as a consequence of better Understandin of the reality we now pwrceive- -as well, perhaps, as the perception of new dimensions of reality. Should this come about, there will be an unprecedented upheaval in the values /affairs /attitudes /relationships of mankind--and, in a crassly parochial sense, those who are on the leading-edge of such new perceptions will be much better prej,~.relcl to survive the turbulent transition to the new matrices of societal values and oroaniz- ation. Limited impressions Concerning Current Community involvment & Intentions 8., There probably are a number of other Agency or community elements engaged (or, at least, with legitimate interests) in this area but my current understanding of the ii olvemeja 96provea 'FabnM& AV'2'U1d6FOh?&': '&x'O-Af7P96-00787 R000400070031 -9 a. DDP/TSD has made the only substantial investment- -something on the order 8 - 9~1~ -,qAAg~PP,~~1,q0 ~PQ qjpq~0031-9 of 2KApprAro.1~91J~qWgpAqqW ~7 a support SRI for one year (recently begun) of investigations of SWANN; while TSD is repute d to have beci impressed by the recent presentations, I have no idea what their short- or long-range hopes /purposes /intentions are or the nature of the precise exploitation they have in mind. (NOTE: I am having lunch with C/TSD on 26 iAN and may have more insights in these areas afterwards. ) SG1 I b. DDS&T/OSI : although was apparently instrumental in arranging the recent presentation and has apparently dealt with SRI extensively, I believe that OSI has not provided funds for the investigations and does not intend to do so; they see their only legitimate interest as being an analysis of the threat potential in the hands of other powers and do not believe that basic research in this area is consistent with their responsibilities. c. DDS&T/ORD: I believe that ORD has not provided any funds for the investig- ations and that its role has been limited to that of interested observers. d. OMS/Office of Security/Office of Commo all have obvious, though currently marginal, functional interests but have played only monitoring roles thus far and, apparently, have no intention of providing funds. e. Non-Agency - DOD (ARPA) and NSA are alleged. to have considerable interest in the area and have had some limited dealings with SRI (including the recent present- ations) but, despite a number of false stants , have apparently put no funds into the project and do not intend to do so; at least one reason appears to be the difficulty and/or potential embarrar-.sment associated with justifying the expenditures to Congress; ARPA representatives are said to have stated recently that they accept SRI's motivation but believe they are being 'taken' by GELLER. SG1 1 9. It is my understanding (per that SRI, far from resisting our substan- tive involvement in the investigations, has 'pled' for the USG to design and run the entire investigative procedure --certainly as regards SWANN and possibly GELLER as well. But they would, no doubt, want the investigations to be done under their auspices --and, at least until we knc v more about the attitudes of GELLER JSW1\NN and about the cover being employed, this would probably be prefarable. One of SRI's problems appears to be the fact that their basic research program is in LASER; the parapsychological involvement seems to have come about largely by chance and any in-depth or prolonged program in this direction could be done only by sacrificing their momentum and commitments in the LASER field. The recent predentations were Approved For Release 2000/08/07 : CIA-RDP96-00787ROO0400070031-9 calculated to determine whether USG interest in the field was great enough to warrant Approved For Re -M .se 2000/08/07 :-C?k-RDP96-00*te7ROO0400070031-9 this adjustmont--and whether the necessary 50 to 75K would be foi-thcoming. The SRI representatives are apparently going to remain in the Washington area until 29 Ky in the hopes that further exploratory discussions are desired. La i~uL Recommendations 10. It is recommended that, should further discussions with SRI bear out the above assumptions concerning their willingness to accept our design and controls and the permanent presence of our reprosentative(s), ORD undertake to supply the balance of the funds for a one-year project and arrange with TSD for joint management of th-- project. (NOTE: There has apparently been some talk, by ARPA and NSA, about a community-wide consortium for such an undertaking but it is believed that this would be unnecessarily cumbersome- -although community-wide in-put at appropriate stages, see below, would be essential. ) In the event that there is general (ORD/TSD/SRI) agreement in principle, it is recommended that we negotiate for a one or two month delay in the beginning of the project year. This would be essential (even if at some extra cost) so that Agency and community representatives could structure a design for the project year which would satisfy all requirements and, in the event of positive conclusions, be above reproach. 11. It is further recommended that, upon reaching such an agreement, a Para-psych Steering Panel be formed immediately- -with one voting member each (plus optional non-voting observers) from the following elements: DDP/TSD; DDS&T/ORD; DDS&T/OSI OMS; Office of Security; Office of Communications; and each of the following 'hard- SG1H target' operational compianents: In calling for the establishment of the panel, the chiefs of the various components should be encouraged to designate individuals of appropriate background/interests/temperament. The panel, chaired jointly (or on a rotating basis) by TSD and ORD, would naturally define its own working procedures but it would be useful to consider e-,tablishing immediately a series of Working Groups to prepare basic position papers for the Panel's consideration on a number of areas: a. laboratory controls to be implemented; b. the precise nature and sequence of investigations to be run; c. to sting -controls of environment and the individual to be run durin the phenomena; d. medical /behavioral /psychiatric /psychological /biographical testing and re seaA0MVL:cd 4zor"61ises2-DOWOMT-i6Gl&RDPS&M7875ROQG4QW7WI"gatioiis; Approved For ReMse 2000/08/07 : CIA-RDP96-00*~RO00400070031-9 e. procedures for collecting/ storing /analyzing all statistical data related to the investigations; f. security procedures; g. management procedures --e. g. , locale, choice and rotation of supervisors, as well as SOPs for their performance; h. utility forecasts--c. g. , fut(urology projections and operational pragmatics. As soon as the Panel has acceptable working drafts in each of these areas they (perhaps on a relatively selective basis) should be submitted to the appropriate non-agen-cy elements with a legitimate interest and some potential for contribution- -this should probably include (but not necessarily be limited to) NSA and ARPA. External responses to these papers would then be considered by the A$" Panel in the preparation of its detailed Project Proposal for the consideration of C/ORD and C/TSD (and, as deemed appropriate, higher authority). In the interim , basic and undisputed aspects of the design could be discussed with S11I so that appropriate adjustments could be made in their installation (or, variously, so that a new installation could be found), so that upon approval the investigations could proceed without undue delay. And, finally, the Panel should focus on all likely requirements f or extraordinary experts /gear/ facilities that are apt to be encountered during the project and, in an appendix to its basic Proposal, should identify those available (already cleared) and should suggest appropriate action for locating and (in the approYWiate cover context) contacting the remainder--so that, at some critical juncture, the entire project won't ',:e stalled for want of reasonable foresight. Approved For Release 2000/08/07 : CIA-RDP96-00787ROO0400070031-9